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Recalls & Product Safety Warnings

Data below is populated with information from the Recall web pages on CPSC.gov. Data updates weekly as new recalls are announced. Recall Remedy data may change daily to reflect updates to company operating status or recall remedy availability. Please submit any questions about these charts to suggestions@cpsc.gov.

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Number of Recalls

* Number of recalls posted to CPSC.gov so far this fiscal year.

Top Recall Hazards - 5 Years

Hazard definitions:
  1. Fire - Use of the product may lead to a fire or the product violates federal fabric flammability regulations.
  2. Burn - Use of the product may lead to experiencing burns.
  3. Heat-Related Explosion - The product may explode unintentionally.
  4. Falling - Use of the product may cause an unintentional fall.
  5. Poisoning - Use of the product may lead to poisoning.
  6. Crash - Use of the product may lead to an unintentional crash.
  7. Choking - Use of the product may lead to choking, or the product violates federal toy safety standards, or the product violates federal children clothing standards (drawstrings).
  8. Cuts - Use of the product may lead to unintentional cuts and/or lacerations.
  9. Safety Equipment Malfunction - The safety product does not operate as intended and use of the product may lead to injury or death.
  10. Impact - Use of the product may lead to an unintentional impact that may cause injury or death.

Recall Remedies - 5 Years

Note: Recall Remedy data may change daily to reflect updates to company operating status or recall remedy availability. Recalls with multiple remedies (ex. Repair and Replace) will be counted in each remedy.
  1. Refund - A customer may receive a full or partial refund, or gift card for the recalled product.
  2. Repair - The company is offering a repair to the recalled product.
  3. Replace - The company is offering a replacement for the recalled product in the form of a new product or other products of similar value.
  4. Dispose - The product should be thrown out or recycled.
  5. New Instructions - The company will issue new instructions on how the customer can make the recalled product safe.
  6. Remedy No Longer Available - The recalled product should be thrown out or recycled.
March 13, 2025
Hazard:

The recalled water bottles can crack, causing a laceration hazard.

Remedy:

Consumers should immediately stop using the recalled Gerolsteiner sparkling water bottles, and return the bottles from the affected lots to the store where they were purchased for a full refund. Consumers will not be asked for proof of purchase, but will need to return the recalled bottle to receive a refund (in the form of cash or credit).

Units:

About 61,500 bottles

Consumer Contact:
Phone: (800) 777-0633
March 13, 2025
Injuries reported
Hazard:

The stools can collapse or tip over while in use, posing serious fall and injury hazards to children.

Remedy:

Consumers should stop using the recalled stools and store them away from children until repaired. Contact Blissful-Time to receive a free repair kit, including shipping. The repair kit consists of two steps, one base, and one guardrail. Blissful-Time is contacting all known purchasers directly.

Units:

About 10,300

Consumer Contact:
Phone: (833) 999-9327
March 13, 2025
Hazard:

The recalled BD Vision harnesses can degrade over time and fail to support the climber, posing a fall hazard resulting in serious injury or death.

Remedy:

Consumers should immediately stop using the recalled BD Vision harnesses and contact Black Diamond for a full refund (in the form of a credit card reimbursement) or a one-time-use $200 credit, which can be used at a Black Diamond store or on the Black Diamond website. Contact Black Diamond for a pre-paid shipping label to return the recalled harness. Black Diamond is contacting all known purchasers.

Units:

About 1,580 (In addition, about 130 were sold in Canada)

March 13, 2025
Hazard:

Part of the teethers’ safety snap clasp can detach, posing a choking hazard.

Remedy:

Consumers should immediately stop using the recalled teethers and contact Chews Life to receive a free repair. Consumers will be provided with a prepaid shipping label to return the recalled teethers to Chews Life. Chews Life will mail consumers the repaired teethers at no charge.

Units:

About 5,700

Consumer Contact:
Phone: (888) 742-2276
March 13, 2025
Hazard:

The heater’s fan can fail to turn on and cause the unit to overheat and ignite, posing fire and burn hazards.

Remedy:

Consumers should immediately stop using the recalled desktop heaters and return them to any Meijer store for a full refund through the original form of payment.

Units:

About 6,050

March 13, 2025
Hazard:

The recalled gates violate the federal safety regulations for expansion gates and expandable enclosures because a child’s torso can fit through the opening between the gate and the floor, posing a risk of serious injury or death due to entrapment hazard.

Remedy:

Consumers should stop using the recalled gates immediately and contact HabiLife Direct for a full refund. Consumers will be asked to destroy the gates by cutting the mesh and disposing of the gates. Consumers must send a photo of the destroyed gates to service@hblife.fans. HabiLife Direct and Amazon are contacting all known purchasers directly.

Units:

About 880

Consumer Contact:
Phone: (771) 232-2236
March 13, 2025
Hazard:

The fork steerer tube on the recalled bicycles and framesets can crack, break, or separate during use, posing a fall hazard.

Remedy:

Consumers should immediately stop using the recalled bicycles and contact an authorized BMC dealer for a free inspection and a free replacement of the forks. BMC is contacting all known purchasers directly.

Units:

About 1,300

March 13, 2025
Injuries reported
Hazard:

The lithium-ion batteries can overheat and ignite, posing a fire hazard to consumers.

Remedy:

Consumers should stop using the scooters with the recalled batteries immediately and contact Sublue for a free new generation battery replacement (gray battery). Sublue will provide a battery collection kit for the consumer to return the recalled battery and will provide the replacement battery upon return of the recalled battery.

Note: Do not throw this recalled battery in the trash or in used battery recycling boxes found at various retail and home improvement stores. Recalled lithium-ion batteries should be disposed of in accordance with any local and state ordinances, following the procedures established by municipal recycling centers for damaged, defective, or recalled lithium batteries, because these potentially hazardous batteries must be handled differently than other batteries. 

Units:

About 40,370

Consumer Contact:
Phone: (855) 206-8698
March 06, 2025
Hazard:

The recalled children’s bathrobes violate federal flammability regulations for children’s sleepwear, posing a risk of burn injuries and death to children.

Remedy:

Consumers should immediately stop using the recalled bathrobes, take them away from children, and contact Nanchang Zhongcangjishi E-commerce for a full refund. Consumers will be asked to destroy the garments by cutting them in half and emailing a photo of the destroyed garment to business@lolanta.com. Upon receipt of the photo, consumers will be issued a full refund of the purchase price. Amazon and Nanchang Zhongcangjishi E-commerce are contacting all known purchasers directly.

Units:

About 5,100

March 06, 2025
Hazard:

The recalled Taylor Water Technologies reagent bottles sold with test kits contain sulfuric acid, which must be in child-resistant packaging, as required by the Poison Prevention Packaging Act (PPPA). The packaging for the bottle with sulfuric acid is not child resistant, posing a risk of chemical burns to the skin or eyes and internal corrosive burns, if ingested.

Remedy:

Consumers should stop using the recalled Phosphate Reagent #1 bottles immediately, place them in a safe and secure location away from the reach of children and contact Taylor Water Technologies for information on how to properly dispose of the recalled bottle and obtain a free replacement bottle. Only unexpired Phosphate Reagent #1 bottles are included in this recall and eligible for the free replacement. Taylor Water Technologies is contacting all known purchasers directly.

Units:

About 10,000

Consumer Contact:
Phone: (800) 837-8548
March 13, 2025
Hazard:

The lithium-ion battery inside the bottle can overheat, posing a fire hazard to consumers. 

Consumer Action:

CPSC urges consumers to immediately dispose of the products following local hazardous waste disposal procedures.

March 06, 2025
Hazard:

The mattresses fail to meet federal thickness and dimension requirements for play yard mattresses sold separately from play yards, resulting in a dangerous gap between mattress and the play yard side. Babies have suffocated in gaps between an undersized mattress, or extra padding, and side walls of a product, especially when the infant’s face becomes trapped against the play yard or the mattress, preventing the infant from breathing.

Consumer Action:

CPSC urges consumers to stop using and dispose of the play yard mattresses immediately. Do not sell or give away these hazardous mattresses.

February 27, 2025
Hazard:

The Style Life Eleven loungers evaluated by CPSC violate the federal safety regulations for Infant Sleep Products because the sides are too low to contain the infant. The sleeping pad is too thick, posing a suffocation hazard. The enclosed openings at the foot of the loungers are wider than allowed, posing a fall hazard and an entrapment hazard to infants. Also, the baby loungers do not have a stand, posing a fall hazard if used on elevated surfaces. These violations create an unsafe sleeping environment for infants and can cause death or serious injury to infants.

Consumer Action:

CPSC urges consumers to stop using and destroy the Style Life Eleven baby loungers immediately and seek a recall remedy if available. Do not sell or give away these hazardous baby loungers.

February 27, 2025
Hazard:

The dressers are unstable if they are not anchored to the wall, posing a risk of serious injury or death from tip-over and entrapment hazards. The dressers violate the performance and labeling requirements of the STURDY Act and CPSC’s implementing regulations, which establish a mandatory safety standard to prevent injury or death caused by clothing or storage units tipping over.

Consumer Action:

CPSC urges consumers to dispose of or anchor the EnHomee Tall Dressers to a wall. Do not sell or give away these hazardous clothing storage units.

February 27, 2025
Hazard:

The high chairs pose a risk of serious injury or death to babies due to the fall hazard because they can tip over, the restraint system is not attached to the product, the tray can disengage, and the locks or latches can fail violating either the Federal booster seat or high chair regulations. In addition, the high chairs pose a fatal entrapment hazard because the opening between the tray and the seat is large enough to allow a baby to become entrapped violating the high chair regulation.

Consumer Action:

CPSC urges consumers to stop using the high chairs immediately and dispose of them. Do not sell or give away these hazardous products.

February 20, 2025
Injuries reported
Hazard:

They pose a risk of burn injury from hot water.

Consumer Action:

CPSC urges consumers immediately to stop using the Uomeod Mini Steamers, cut the cord and dispose of the products. Do not sell or give away these hazardous steamers.

February 13, 2025
Hazard:

The hair dryers, which lack an integrated immersion protection device, can cause death or serious injury due to electrocution and shock hazards. The hair dryers are in violation of the federal regulations for hair dryers and present a substantial product hazard. 

Consumer Action:

CPSC urges consumers to immediately stop using the hair dryers, and destroy them by unplugging, cutting the cord and safely disposing in the garbage.

January 30, 2025
Hazard:

First, the spacing between the cribs’ slats is wider than allowed under the federal safety standard, posing a potentially deadly entrapment hazard to children. 

Second, in bedside sleeper mode, the product poses a fall hazard because the side rail is lower than the required height and it is missing a mechanism to attach the product to an adult bed, which violates the federal safety standard for bedside sleepers.

Third, the mattresses included with the product pose a hazard of fatal suffocation because they are too thick, which violates the federal safety regulation for crib mattresses. 

Fourth, the product comes with a padded crib bumper which can obstruct breathing and cause death by suffocation. Padded crib bumpers are banned under federal law.

Consumer Action:

CPSC urges consumers to stop using the cribs immediately and dispose of them. Do not sell or give away these hazardous products.

January 30, 2025
Injuries reported
Hazard:

CPSC evaluated these safes and found that the biometric programming feature can fail without consumers realizing that the safe’s contents, including firearms, can be accessed by unauthorized users, including children.

Consumer Action:

CPSC urges consumers who own affected safes to remove the batteries that power the biometric feature, disable the biometric feature by puncturing the biometric reader with a screwdriver, and only use the keys to lock and access contents from the safe. 

January 23, 2025
Hazard:

The carriers lack structural integrity and can fail to retain infants in the carriers, posing a fall hazard in violation of federal safety requirements. The sling carriers also do not have required warnings and instructions

Consumer Action:

CPSC urges consumers to stop using the sling carriers immediately and dispose of them. Do not sell or give away these hazardous sling carriers.

Units:

About 750

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